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Mindfulness, authentic functioning, and work engagement: A growth modeling approach

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TLDR
In this article, the authors examined the relationship between mindfulness, authentic functioning, and work engagement, both statically and dynamically, both cross-sectionally and dynamically as they change over training.
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This article is published in Journal of Vocational Behavior.The article was published on 2013-06-01 and is currently open access. It has received 256 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Mindfulness & Work engagement.

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Contemplating Mindfulness at Work An Integrative Review

TL;DR: Mindfulness research activity is surging within organizational science as discussed by the authors, and emerging evidence across multiple fields suggests that mindfulness is fundamentally connected to many aspects of workplace functioning, but this knowledge base has not been systematically integrated to date.
Journal ArticleDOI

Examining workplace mindfulness and its relations to job performance and turnover intention

TL;DR: Workplace mindfulness is positively related to job performance and negatively related to turnover intention, and these relationships account for variance beyond the effects of constructs occupying a similar conceptual space, namely, the constituent dimensions of work engagement (vigor, dedication, and absorption) as mentioned in this paper.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Role of Mindfulness and Psychological Capital on the Well-Being of Leaders

TL;DR: Testing the direct effect that organizational leaders' level of mindfulness and the mediating effect of their psychological capital may have on their mental well-being found mindfulness was found to be negatively related to various dysfunctional outcomes.
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Mindfulness in Organizations: A Cross-Level Review

TL;DR: In this article, a cross-level review of mindfulness in organizations is provided, and it is shown that mindfulness is neither mysterious nor mystical, but rather can be reliably and validly measured, linked to an array of individual and organizational outcomes, and induced through meditative and non-meditative practices and processes at the individual and collective levels.
Journal ArticleDOI

Mindfulness at Work: A New Approach to Improving Individual and Organizational Performance

TL;DR: In this article, the authors provide an overview of what mindfulness is, where the concept came from, how it has been utilized and studied to date, and what its application in the work setting is.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Benefits of mindfulness at work: the role of mindfulness in emotion regulation, emotional exhaustion, and job satisfaction

TL;DR: The idea that mindfulness reduces emotional exhaustion and improves job satisfaction is investigated and it is suggested that these associations are mediated by the emotion regulation strategy of surface acting.
Journal ArticleDOI

Burnout and work engagement: Independent factors or opposite poles?

TL;DR: In this article, the core burnout and engagement dimensions can be seen as opposites of each other along two distinct bipolar dimensions dubbed energy and identification, and the results obtained by means of the nonparametric Mokken scaling method in three different samples (Ns = 477, 507, and 381) supported their proposal.
Journal ArticleDOI

Building Better Theory: Time and The Specification of When Things Happen

TL;DR: In this article, the authors developed a set of X,Y configurations that describe the main ways that causal relationships are represented in theory and tested in research, and discussed the implications of this analysis for constructing better organizational theories.
Book ChapterDOI

A Multicomponent Conceptualization of Authenticity: Theory and Research

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present research and theory pertaining to their multicomponent perspective on authentic functioning. And they discuss potential downsides or costs for authentic functioning and describe some future directions for research on authenticity.
Journal ArticleDOI

Diary Studies in Organizational Research: An Introduction and Some Practical Recommendations

TL;DR: In this article, the authors provide an introduction to diary studies and discuss methodological issues researchers face when planning a diary study, examine recent methodological developments, and give practical recommendations, including different types of diary studies, research questions to be examined, compliance and the issue of missing data, sample size, and issues of analyses.
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Frequently Asked Questions (11)
Q1. What are the contributions in this paper?

The authors examined the relationships between mindfulness, authentic functioning, and work engagement, both statically ( cross-sectionally ) and dynamically as they change over training. The authors discuss how these findings further clarify the role of mindfulness in the workplace and highlight the implications for the literature on authentic functioning and work engagement. 

In this section the authors offer how future research can build on the findings in this study. For example, future research could use a diary-method ( e. g. Ohly, Sonnentag, Niessem, & Zapf, 2010 ) and ask training participants to report on random intervals during the training period about their positive experiences of flow and authentic functioning. 

Heppner et al. (2008) demonstrated that mindfulness, both statistically and dynamically, helps to reduce aggressive behavior in response to social exclusion feedback (e.g., “Nobody wants to work with you”). 

Mindfulness can be instrumental in shifting one’s perspective or “reperceiving” what is already known (Carmody, Baer, Lykins & Olendzki, 2009; Shapiro et al., 2006), thus keeping employees interested, attentive, and involved in their work. 

The authors found no significant interaction effect between time and meditation practice after training, Wilks Lambda = .97; F(6, 50) = .25; p = .96, suggesting that changes cannot be attributed to amount of meditation practice after training. 

Shapiro et al. (2006) summarized that mindfulness training operates through the clarification of one’s personal values and related increases in self-management. 

This is important as staying true to one’s core sense of self clarifies how mindful employees attain more stable work-related well-being. 

When the authors alternately constrained each pairwise factor correlation to unity, the authors found that, in each case, constraining the factor correlation significantly worsened model fit (p < 0.05), suggesting that their study variables are distinct. 

however, is a short-term and more fleeting experience of being fully there in the present moment (Csikszentmihalyi, 1997), whereas work engagement reflects more stable or eudaimonic well-being. 

In addition, when the authors constrained the factor loadings from the different time periods to be equal, the authors found no significant drop in model fit. 

The authors predict that mindfulness is related to authentic functioning in that a receptive internal awareness of one’s thoughts, emotions and behaviors helps individuals to become more aware of one’s “true” self (Brown & Ryan, 2003). 

Trending Questions (1)
Are state mindfulness and state work engagement related during the workday?

The provided paper does not directly address the relationship between state mindfulness and state work engagement during the workday.